Lem’s latest: Chambers’ cruiserweight debut; Lewkowicz signs Cuellar

As an undersized heavyweight standing 6-foot-1, “Fast” Eddie Chambers, always appeared to be facing an uphill battle.

Chambers was out-weighed, 227-to-219 by 6-2 Russian Alexander Povetkin prior to his unanimous-decision loss in January of 2008. He was dwarfed, 244-to-209 by 6-6 RING champion Wladimir Klitschko for his 12th-round stoppage loss in March of 2010.

For his last fight in June of last year, a disputed split-decision loss to Tomasz Adamek, Chambers (36-3, 18 knockouts), of Philadelphia, weighed a career-low 202 against a former light heavyweight and cruiserweight titleholder who tipped the scales at 225.

But on the Aug. 3 from Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Conn., in an event that will be televised on NBC Sports, Chambers will debut as a 200-pounder against Thabiso “The Rock” Mchunu (13-1, 10 KOs), of South Africa, a muscular 24-year old southpaw who will be after his fourth-straight stoppage victory since being knocked out in the sixth round by Zack Mwekassa in September of 2011.

“I’ve been thinking about it for a long time. I always thought that if I could fight guys my own size, I’d have the opportunities and the upper hand,” said Chambers, 31, who weighed 208 pounds and scored a knockdown during a majority-decision triumph over previously unbeaten, 6-foot-7, 254-pound Alexander Dimitrenko in January of 2008.

“At cruiserweight, I feel as comfortable as I did at heavyweight. My last fight with Tomasz Adamek, I was only at 202. So the transition should be seamless. It shouldn’t be a problem. As far as the experience I had at heavyweight, obviously that will serve me well. However, when you move down a weight class, the guys tend to be a little more elusive and a little more coordinated. No one is going to have a speed advantage over me, but they are slightly faster than heavyweights. So I have to prepare to be faster as well.”

Adamek, 36, was last in the ring for December’s split-decision victory over former RING 200-pound champion Steve Cunningham. On Aug. 3 he will face rugged journeyman Dominick Guinn (34-9-1, 23 KOs).

A 38-year-old who ended a three-fight losing streak with last month’s first-round stoppage of Stacey Frazier, Guinn has replaced Tony Grano, who suffered a neck injury.

If Adamek is successful against Guinn, Duva could match him against promotional stablemate Bryant Jennings (17-0, 9 KOs), winner of his past three bouts by stoppage.

“That’s a great possibility, although I’m just not sure at this point that I would go that far. It’s certainly plausible, let’s put it that way. It could happen,” said Duva of a potential Adamek-Jennings bout.

“But it’s way too early to say whether it will or when it will or anything like that. We’ve just got to win this August fight, and then see if a few things can fall into place so that we can make it real, and then, we’ll let you know.”